While the exact model-specific revisions are yet to be disclosed, Hyundai Motor India will increase prices across its entire range, including hatchbacks, SUVs, and sedans, from May 2026.
By Sanorita

Hyundai has announced that the prices of its cars will go up by up to 1% from May 2026 owing to rising input costs and other cost pressures. While the exact model-wise revision is yet to be disclosed, the increase will be applicable across its entire range, which spans across hatchbacks, SUVs, and sedans. The move comes at a time when a majority of carmakers have already raised prices this month. For the uninitiated, this is Hyundai’s second price hike in 2026, following a 0.6% increase in January driven by rising costs of essential commodities and precious metals. It will now be interesting to see the extent of the model-wise price revision in this second hike.
The Indian automotive industry has seen price revisions from multiple brands in April 2026. Companies like Tata Motors, BMW, Audi, and Mercedes-Benz India have increased their car prices due to rising input costs and macroeconomic pressures. Audi has implemented a price hike of up to 2% effective April 1, 2026, attributing the move to higher input expenses and fluctuations in foreign exchange rates. Similarly, Tata Motors has announced an increase of up to 0.5% on its ICE models, stating that the revision aims to partially offset mounting production costs, with the final impact varying by model and variant.
Luxury carmaker Mercedes-Benz India has also revised prices by up to 2% across its lineup, although the increase is not uniform across models. Meanwhile, BMW and its sister brand Mini have raised prices by up to 2% their models citing higher logistics expenses, increased raw material costs, and the weakening Indian rupee as key reasons. Additionally, MG Motor India has implemented a similar price hike of up to 2% across most of its models from April 1 owing to rising input costs. However, its premium offerings sold via the MG Select channel, including the Cyberster and M9, remain unaffected.